Darryl WimberleyRecensioni
Autore di The King of Colored Town
Recensioni
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History and scenery blend in hauntingly evocative prose. Space aliens and Mexican laborers evoke both mysticism and biting humor. Trust invites disbelief. And even the blend of first person, hard-hitting narration with third person scenes works perfectly, maintaining that sense of space between fact and whatever the facts are made to mean. In the end, it all boils down to trust. Do we trust the scientist, the visionary, the history…? Will trusting her instincts lead Clara Sue to truth? And does truth really have to be spread on the front page?
Post Facto reveals a post-factual world, gently pokes fun at it, revels in a scarily believable blend of action and mystery, offers laugh-out-loud headlines as chapter headings—each accurately told, in some sense of accuracy—and threads its way through small-town politics, haunted by big-town memories, till that wonderful understanding… “even in a post-factual world there is a difference between true believers and those who truly believe.”
Clara Sue is “only the reporter,” but the tale she tells draws readers deeply into a cool blend of mystery, reality, intrigue, and oddly unsettling common sense. It’s highly recommended!
Disclosure: I was given a preview edition to read and I love it!